The Legend of the Third Degree.
The most important and significant
of the legendary symbols of Freemasonry is, undoubtedly,
that which relates to the fate of Hiram Abif, commonly
called, “by way of excellence,” the Legend
of the Third Degree.
The first written record that I have
been able to find of this legend is contained in the
second edition of Anderson’s Constitutions, published
in 1738, and is in these words:
“It (the temple) was finished
in the short space of seven years and six months,
to the amazement of all the world; when the cape-stone
was celebrated by the fraternity with great joy.
But their joy was soon interrupted by the sudden death
of their dear master, Hiram Abif, whom they decently
interred, in the lodge near the temple, according to
ancient dusage.”
In the next edition of the same work,
published in 1756, a few additional circumstances
are related, such as the participation of King Solomon
in the general grief, and the fact that the king of
Israel “ordered his obsequies to be conducted
with great solemnity and decency.” With
these exceptions, and the citations of the same passages,
made by subsequent authors, the narrative has always
remained unwritten, and descended, from age to age,
through the means of oral tradition.
The legend has been considered of
so much importance that it has been preserved in the
symbolism of every masonic rite. No matter what
modifications or alterations the general system may
have undergone, no matter how much the
ingenuity or the imagination of the founders of rites
may have perverted or corrupted other symbols, abolishing
the old and substituting new ones, the
legend of the Temple Builder has ever been left untouched,
to present itself in all the integrity of its ancient
mythical form.
What, then, is the signification of
this symbol, so important and so extensively diffused?
What interpretation can we give to it that will account
for its universal adoption? How is it that it
has thus become so intimately interwoven with Freemasonry
as to make, to all appearances, a part of its very
essence, and to have been always deemed inseparable
from it?
To answer these questions, satisfactorily,
it is necessary to trace, in a brief investigation,
the remote origin of the institution of Freemasonry,
and its connection with the ancient systems of initiation.
It was, then, the great object of
all the rites and mysteries which constituted the
“Spurious Freemasonry” of antiquity to
teach the consoling doctrine of the immortality of
the soul. This dogma, shining as an almost solitary
beacon-light in the surrounding gloom of pagan darkness,
had undoubtedly been received from that ancient people
or priesthood what has been called the system
of “Pure Freemasonry,” and among whom
it probably existed only in the form of an abstract
proposition or a simple and unembellished tradition.
But in the more sensual minds of the pagan philosophers
and mystics, the idea, when presented to the initiates
in their Mysteries, was always conveyed in the form
of a scenic representation. The influence, too,
of the early Sabian worship of the sun and heavenly
bodies, in which the solar orb was adored, on its
resurrection, each morning, from the apparent death
of its evening setting, caused this rising sun to
be adopted in the more ancient Mysteries as a symbol
of the regeneration of the soul.
Thus in the Egyptian Mysteries we
find a representation of the death and subsequent
regeneration of Osiris; in the Phœnician, of Adonis;
in the Syrian, of Dionysus; in all of which the scenic
apparatus of initiation was intended to indoctrinate
the candidate into the dogma of a future life.
It will be sufficient here to refer
simply to the fact, that through the instrumentality
of the Tyrian workmen at the temple of King Solomon,
the spurious and pure branches of the masonic system
were united at Jerusalem, and that the same method
of scenic representation was adopted by the latter
from the former, and the narrative of the temple builder
substituted for that of Dionysus, which was the myth
peculiar to the mysteries practised by the Tyrian
workmen.
The idea, therefore, proposed to be
communicated in the myth of the ancient Mysteries
was the same as that which is now conveyed in the
masonic legend of the Third Degree.
Hence, then, Hiram Abif is, in the
masonic system, the symbol of human nature, as developed
in the life here and the life to come; and so, while
the temple was, as I have heretofore shown, the visible
symbol of the world, its builder became the mythical
symbol of man, the dweller and worker in that world.
Now, is not this symbolism evident to every reflective
mind?
Man, setting forth on the voyage of
life, with faculties and powers fitting him for the
due exercise of the high duties to whose performance
he has been called, holds, if he be “a curious
and cunning workman,” skilled in all moral
and intellectual purposes (and it is only of such men
that the temple builder can be the symbol), within
the grasp of his attainment the knowledge of all that
divine truth imparted to him as the heirloom of his
race that race to whom it has been granted
to look, with exalted countenance, on high; which
divine truth is symbolized by the WORD.
Thus provided with the word of life,
he occupies his time in the construction of a spiritual
temple, and travels onward in the faithful discharge
of all his duties, laying down his designs upon the
trestle-board of the future and invoking the assistance
and direction of God.
But is his path always over flowery
meads and through pleasant groves? Is there no
hidden foe to obstruct his progress? Is all before
him clear and calm, with joyous sunshine and refreshing
zephyrs? Alas! not so. “Man is
born to trouble, as the sparks fly upward.”
At every “gate of life” as
the Orientalists have beautifully called the different
ages he is beset by peril. Temptations
allure his youth, misfortunes darken the pathway of
his manhood, and his old age is encumbered with infirmity
and disease. But clothed in the armor of virtue
he may resist the temptation; he may cast misfortunes
aside, and rise triumphantly above them; but to the
last, the direst, the most inexorable foe of his race,
he must eventually yield; and stricken down by death,
he sinks prostrate into the grave, and is buried
in the rubbish of his sin and human frailty.
Here, then, in Masonry, is what was
called the aphanism in the ancient Mysteries.
The bitter but necessary lesson of death has been
imparted. The living soul, with the lifeless body
which encased it, has disappeared, and can nowhere
be found. All is darkness confusion
despair. Divine truth the WORD for
a time is lost, and the Master Mason may now say,
in the language of Hutchinson, “I prepare my
sepulchre. I make my grave in the pollution of
the earth. I am under the shadow of death.”
But if the mythic symbolism ended
here, with this lesson of death, then were the lesson
incomplete. That teaching would be vain and idle nay,
more, it would be corrupt and pernicious which
should stop short of the conscious and innate instinct
for another existence. And hence the succeeding
portions of the legend are intended to convey the sublime
symbolism of a resurrection from the grave and a new
birth into a future life. The discovery of the
body, which, in the initiations of the ancient Mysteries,
was called the euresis, and its removal,
from the polluted grave into which it had been cast,
to an honored and sacred place within the precincts
of the temple, are all profoundly and beautifully
symbolic of that great truth, the discovery of which
was the object of all the ancient initiations, as
it is almost the whole design of Freemasonry, namely,
that when man shall have passed the gates of life and
have yielded to the inexorable fiat of death, he shall
then (not in the pictured ritual of an earthly lodge,
but in the realities of that eternal one, of which
the former is but an antitype) be raised, at the omnific
word of the Grand Master of the Universe, from time
to eternity; from the tomb of corruption to the chambers
of hope; from the darkness of death to the celestial
beams of life; and that his disembodied spirit shall
be conveyed as near to the holy of holies of the divine
presence as humanity can ever approach to Deity.
Such I conceive to be the true interpretation
of the symbolism of the legend of the Third Degree.
I have said that this mythical history
of the temple builder was universal in all nations
and all rites, and that in no place and at no time
had it, by alteration, diminution, or addition, acquired
any essentially new or different form: the myth
has always remained the same.
But it is not so with its interpretation.
That which I have just given, and which I conceive
to be the correct one, has been very generally adopted
by the Masons of this country. But elsewhere,
and by various writers, other interpretations have
been made, very different in their character, although
always agreeing in retaining the general idea of a
resurrection or regeneration, or a restoration of something
from an inferior to a higher sphere or function.
Thus some of the earlier continental
writers have supposed the myth to have been a symbol
of the destruction of the Order of the Templars, looking
upon its restoration to its original wealth and dignities
as being prophetically symbolized.
In some of the high philosophical
degrees it is taught that the whole legend refers
to the sufferings and death, with the subsequent resurrection,
of Christ.
Hutchinson, who has the honor of being
the earliest philosophical writer on Freemasonry in
England, supposes it to have been intended to embody
the idea of the decadence of the Jewish religion,
and the substitution of the Christian in its place
and on its ruins.
Dr. Oliver “clarum
et venerabile nomen” thinks
that it is typical of the murder of Abel by Cain,
and that it symbolically refers to the universal death
of our race through Adam, and its restoration to life
in the Redeemer, according to the expression
of the apostle, “As in Adam we all died, so
in Christ we all live.”
Ragon makes Hiram a symbol of the
sun shorn of its vivifying rays and fructifying power
by the three winter months, and its restoration to
generative heat by the season of spring.
And, finally, Des Etangs,
adopting, in part, the interpretation of Ragon, adds
to it another, which he calls the moral symbolism of
the legend, and supposes that Hiram is no other than
eternal reason, whose enemies are the vices that deprave
and destroy humanity.
To each of these interpretations it
seems to me that there are important objections, though
perhaps to some less so than to others.
As to those who seek for an astronomical
interpretation of the legend, in which the annual
changes of the sun are symbolized, while the ingenuity
with which they press their argument cannot but be
admired, it is evident that, by such an interpretation,
they yield all that Masonry has gained of religious
development in past ages, and fall back upon that corruption
and perversion of Sabaism from which it was the object,
even of the Spurious Freemasonry of antiquity, to
rescue its disciples.
The Templar interpretation of the
myth must at once be discarded if we would avoid the
difficulties of anachronism, unless we deny that the
legend existed before the abolition of the Order of
Knights Templar, and such denial would be fatal to
the antiquity of Freemasonry.
And as to the adoption of the Christian
reference, Hutchinson, and after him Oliver, profoundly
philosophical as are the masonic speculations of both,
have, I am constrained to believe, fallen into a great
error in calling the Master Mason’s degree a
Christian institution. It is true that it embraces
within its scheme the great truths of Christianity
upon the subject of the immortality of the soul and
the resurrection of the body; but this was to be presumed,
because Freemasonry is truth, and Christianity is
truth, and all truth must be identical. But the
origin of each is different; their histories are dissimilar.
The institution of Freemasonry preceded the advent
of Christianity. Its symbols and its legends
are derived from the Solomonic temple, and from the
people even anterior to that. Its religion comes
from the ancient priesthood. Its faith was that
primitive one of Noah and his immediate descendants.
If Masonry were simply a Christian institution, the
Jew and the Moslem, the Brahmin and the Buddhist,
could not conscientiously partake of its illumination;
but its universality is its boast. In its language
citizens of every nation may converse; at its altar
men of all religions may kneel; to its creed disciples
of every faith may subscribe.
Yet it cannot be denied, that since
the advent of Christianity a Christian element has
been almost imperceptibly infused into the masonic
system, at least among Christian Masons. This
has been a necessity; for it is the tendency of every
predominant religion to pervade with its influences
all that surrounds it, or is about it, whether religious,
political, or social. This arises from a need
of the human heart. To the man deeply imbued
with the spirit of his religion there is an almost
unconscious desire to accommodate and adapt all the
business and the amusements of life, the labors and
the employments of his every-day existence, to the
indwelling faith of his soul.
The Christian Mason, therefore, while
acknowledging and justly appreciating the great doctrines
taught in Masonry, and while grateful that these doctrines
were preserved in the bosom of his ancient order at
a time when they were unknown to the multitudes of
the surrounding nations, is still anxious to give
to them a Christian character, to invest them, in
some measure, with the peculiarities of his own creed,
and to bring the interpretation of their symbolism
more nearly home to his own religious sentiments.
The feeling is an instinctive one,
belonging to the noblest aspirations of our human
nature; and hence we find Christian masonic writers
indulging in it almost to an unwarrantable excess,
and by the extent of their sectarian interpretations
materially affecting the cosmopolitan character of
the institution.
This tendency to Christianization
has, in some instances, been so universal, and has
prevailed for so long a period, that certain symbols
and myths have been, in this way, so deeply and thoroughly
imbued with the Christian element as to leave those
who have not penetrated into the cause of this peculiarity,
in doubt whether they should attribute to the symbol
an ancient or a modern and Christian origin.
As an illustration of the idea here
advanced, and as a remarkable example of the result
of a gradually Christianized interpretation of a masonic
symbol, I will refer to the subordinate myth (subordinate,
I mean, to the great legend of the Builder), which
relates the circumstances connected with the grave
upon “the brow of a small hill near Mount
Moriah.”
Now, the myth or legend of a grave
is a legitimate deduction from the symbolism of the
ancient Spurious Masonry. It is the analogue of
the Pastos, Couch, or Coffin,
which was to be found in the ritual of all the pagan
Mysteries. In all these initiations, the aspirant
was placed in a cell or upon a couch, in darkness,
and for a period varying, in the different rites,
from the three days of the Grecian Mysteries to the
fifty of the Persian. This cell or couch, technically
called the “pastos,” was adopted
as a symbol of the being whose death and resurrection
or apotheosis, was represented in the legend.
The learned Faber says that this ceremony
was doubtless the same as the descent into Hades,
and that, when the aspirant entered into the mystic
cell, he was directed to lay himself down upon the
bed which shadowed out the tomb of the Great Father,
or Noah, to whom, it will be recollected, that Faber
refers all the ancient rites. “While stretched
upon the holy couch,” he continues to remark,
“in imitation of his figurative deceased prototype,
he was said to be wrapped in the deep sleep of death.
His resurrection from the bed was his restoration to
life or his regeneration into a new world.”
Now, it is easy to see how readily
such a symbolism would be seized by the Temple Masons,
and appropriated at once to the grave at the brow
of the hill. At first, the interpretation,
like that from which it had been derived, would be
cosmopolitan; it would fit exactly to the general dogmas
of the resurrection of the body and the immortality
of the soul.
But on the advent of Christianity,
the spirit of the new religion being infused into
the old masonic system, the whole symbolism of the
grave was affected by it. The same interpretation
of a resurrection or restoration to life, derived
from the ancient “pastos,” was, it
is true, preserved; but the facts that Christ himself
had come to promulgate to the multitudes the same
consoling dogma, and that Mount Calvary, “the
place of a skull,” was the spot where the Redeemer,
by his own death and resurrection, had testified the
truth of the doctrine, at once suggested to the old
Christian Masons the idea of Christianizing the ancient
symbol.
Let us now examine briefly how that
idea has been at length developed.
In the first place, it is necessary
to identify the spot where the “newly-made grave”
was discovered with Mount Calvary, the place of the
sepulchre of Christ. This can easily be done by
a very few but striking analogies, which will, I conceive,
carry conviction to any thinking mind.
1. Mount Calvary was a small hill.
2. It was situated in a westward
direction from the temple, and near Mount Moriah.
3. It was on the direct road
from Jerusalem to Joppa, and is thus the very spot
where a weary brother, travelling on that road,
would find it convenient to sit down to rest and
refresh himself.
4. It was outside the gate of the temple.
5. It has at least one cleft
in the rock, or cave, which was the place which
subsequently became the sepulchre of our Lord.
But this coincidence need scarcely to be insisted
on, since the whole neighborhood abounds in rocky
clefts, which meet at once the conditions of the masonic
legend.
But to bring this analogical reasoning
before the mind in a more expressive mode, it may
be observed that if a party of persons were to start
forth from the temple at Jerusalem, and travel in a
westward direction towards the port of Joppa, Mount
Calvary would be the first hill met with; and as it
may possibly have been used as a place of sepulture,
which its name of Golgotha seems to import, we
may suppose it to have been the very spot alluded
to in the Third Degree, as the place where the craftsmen,
on their way to Joppa, discovered the evergreen acacia.
Having thus traced the analogy, let
us look a little to the symbolism.
Mount Calvary has always retained
an important place in the legendary history of Freemasonry,
and there are many traditions connected with it that
are highly interesting in their import.
One of these traditions is, that it
was the burial-place of Adam, in order, says the old
legend, that where he lay, who effected the ruin of
mankind, there also might the Savior of the world suffer,
die, and be buried. Sir R. Torkington, who published
a pilgrimage to Jerusalem in 1517, says that “under
the Mount of Calvary is another chapel of our Blessed
Lady and St. John the Evangelist, that was called Golgotha;
and there, right under the mortise of the cross, was
found the head of our forefather, Adam.”
Golgotha, it will be remembered, means, in Hebrew,
“the place of a skull;” and there may be
some connection between this tradition and the name
of Golgotha, by which the Evangelists inform us, that
in the time of Christ Mount Calvary was known.
Calvary, or Calvaria, has the same signification in
Latin.
Another tradition states, that it
was in the bowels of Mount Calvary that Enoch erected
his nine-arched vault, and deposited on the foundation-stone
of Masonry that Ineffable Name, whose investigation,
as a symbol of divine truth, is the great object of
Speculative Masonry.
A third tradition details the subsequent
discovery of Enoch’s deposit by King Solomon,
whilst making excavations in Mount Calvary, during
the building of the temple.
On this hallowed spot was Christ the
Redeemer slain and buried. It was there that,
rising on the third day from his sepulchre, he gave,
by that act, the demonstrative evidence of the resurrection
of the body and the immortality of the soul.
And it was on this spot that the same
great lesson was taught in Masonry the
same sublime truth the development of which
evidently forms the design of the Third or Master
Mason’s degree.
There is in these analogies a sublime
beauty as well as a wonderful coincidence between
the two systems of Masonry and Christianity, that
must, at an early period, have attracted the attention
of the Christian Masons.
Mount Calvary is consecrated to the
Christian as the place where his crucified Lord gave
the last great proof of the second life, and fully
established the doctrine of the resurrection which
he had come to teach. It was the sepulchre of
him
“Who captive led captivity,
Who robbed the grave of victory,
And took the sting from death.”
It is consecrated to the Mason, also,
as the scene of the euresis, the place of the
discovery, where the same consoling doctrines of the
resurrection of the body and the immortality of the
soul are shadowed forth in profoundly symbolic forms.
These great truths constitute the
very essence of Christianity, in which it differs
from and excels all religious systems that preceded
it; they constitute, also, the end, aim, and object
of all Freemasonry, but more especially that of the
Third Degree, whose peculiar legend, symbolically
considered, teaches nothing more nor less than that
there is an immortal and better part within us, which,
as an emanation from that divine spirit which pervades
all nature, can never die.
The identification of the spot on
which this divine truth was promulgated in both systems the
Christian and the Masonic affords an admirable
illustration of the readiness with which the religious
spirit of the former may be infused into the symbolism
of the latter. And hence Hutchinson, thoroughly
imbued with these Christian views of Masonry, has
called the Master Mason’s order a Christian degree,
and thus Christianizes the whole symbolism of its
mythical history.
“The Great Father of all, commiserating
the miseries of the world, sent his only Son, who
was innocence itself, to teach the doctrine
of salvation by whom man was raised from
the death of sin unto the life of righteousness from
the tomb of corruption unto the chamber of hope from
the darkness of despair to the celestial beams of faith;
and not only working for us this redemption, but making
with us the covenant of regeneration; whence we are
become the children of the Divinity, and inheritors
of the realms of heaven.
“We, Masons, describing
the deplorable estate of religion under the Jewish
law, speak in figures: ’Her tomb was in
the rubbish and filth cast forth of the temple, and
acacia wove its branches over her monuments;’
akakia being the Greek word for innocence, or
being free from sin; implying that the sins and corruptions
of the old law, and devotees of the Jewish altar,
had hid Religion from those who sought her, and she
was only to be found where innocence survived,
and under the banner of the Divine Lamb, and, as to
ourselves, professing that we were to be distinguished
by our Acacy, or as true Acacians in
our religious faiths and tenets.
“The acquisition of the doctrine
of redemption is expressed in the typical character
of Huramen (I have found it. Greek),
and by the applications of that name with Masons,
it is implied that we have discovered the knowledge
of God and his salvation, and have been redeemed from
the death of sin and the sepulchre of pollution and
unrighteousness.
“Thus the Master Mason
represents a man, under the Christian doctrine, saved
from the grave of iniquity and raised to the faith
of salvation.”
It is in this way that Masonry has,
by a sort of inevitable process (when we look to the
religious sentiment of the interpreters), been Christianized
by some of the most illustrious and learned writers
on masonic science by such able men as
Hutchinson and Oliver in England, and by Harris, by
Scott, by Salem Towne, and by several others in this
country.
I do not object to the system when
the interpretation is not strained, but is plausible,
consistent, and productive of the same results as in
the instance of Mount Calvary: all that I contend
for is, that such interpretations are modern, and
that they do not belong to, although they may often
be deduced from, the ancient system.
But the true ancient interpretation
of the legend, the universal masonic one, for
all countries and all ages, undoubtedly was, that the
fate of the temple builder is but figurative of the
pilgrimage of man on earth, through trials and temptations,
through sin and sorrow, until his eventual fall beneath
the blow of death and his final and glorious resurrection
to another and an eternal life.